Medicine Hat News

Brodeur in awe of spot in Hall

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

TORONTO Martin Brodeur’s father took pictures of many of the greatest players in NHL history.

His son’s plaque now sits amongst those legends in the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Three-time Stanley Cup champion Martin Brodeur and the rest of the class of 2018 received their Hall of Fame rings Friday to kick off a weekend of festivitie­s that will culminate with Monday’s induction ceremony.

Team photograph­er for the Montreal Canadiens during their glory years, Denis Brodeur snapped shots of Jean Beliveau, Guy Lafleur, Patrick Roy and countless others throughout his own storied career.

“It’s kind of a surreal moment for me to live this,” Martin Brodeur said of being enshrined in the hall. “When you play the game, you never really think about these things.”

Brodeur won the Vezina Trophy as the NHL’s top goalie four times with the New Jersey Devils, took home the Calder Trophy for rookie of the year, owns two Olympic gold medals and is the NHL’s all-time leader in victories (691) and shutouts (125).

“I was asked a lot of questions about a lot of different things when I played,” said the 46-yearold, who retired in 2015 and owns or shares 12 league records. “But when you take a step back after you retire, you understand a little bit where you stand in hockey.”

Denis Brodeur, who died in 2013, took Martin for the first skate of his young life on the ice at the old Montreal Forum when he was a toddler. Now his son is in the hall. “With my dad being so close to the hockey world, I got to meet a lot of these guys,” Martin Brodeur said. “I was fortunate to be around a lot of guys that made their mark in hockey.”

NHL commission­er Gary Bettman, diminutive winger Martin St. Louis, league trailblaze­r Willie O’Ree, Canadian women’s star Jayna Hefford and Russian great Alexander Yakushev are the other five 2018 inductees announced back in June.

Brodeur and St. Louis were eligible to be selected by the 18-member committee for the first time. Nominees require 75 per cent of the vote to make the cut.

The NHL has grown from 24 to 31 teams since Bettman took over as commission­er in 1993, with annual revenue ballooning to nearly US$5 billion. He’s also overseen three lockouts, including the cancellati­on of the entire 2004-05 season, with another work stoppage potentiall­y looming in either 2020 or 2022.

St. Louis went from not being drafted to a 17year NHL career that included 1,033 points and a Hart Trophy as league MVP. The five-foot-eight winger won the Stanley Cup with the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2003-04 and was on Canada’s men’s Olympic team that brought home gold in 2014.

O’Ree became the NHL’s first black player when he was called up by the Boston Bruins in 1958.

A giant in the women’s game, Hefford won four Olympic gold medals and seven world championsh­ips for Canada.

Yakushev, meanwhile, starred for the USSR at the 1972 Summit Series against Canada, scoring seven goals to tie for the tournament lead.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/NATHAN DENETTE ?? Hockey Hall of Fame inductees pictured left to right, Gary Bettman, Martin Brodeur, Jayna Hefford, Willie O'Ree, Martin St. Louis and Alexander Yakushev pose for a photograph in Toronto on Friday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/NATHAN DENETTE Hockey Hall of Fame inductees pictured left to right, Gary Bettman, Martin Brodeur, Jayna Hefford, Willie O'Ree, Martin St. Louis and Alexander Yakushev pose for a photograph in Toronto on Friday.

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